Sample records for israel melendez michael

Carmelo Melendez About Us Carmelo Melendez - Director, Office of Asset Management Mr. Melendez is the Agency's Property Executive, Senior Real Property Officer (SRPO), Head of Contracting Activity (HCA) for Real Estate and Office Director for Asset Management within the Office of Management. His portfolio covers Real Estate, Facility & Infrastructure, and Personal/Industrial Property Management and Policy. In this position, he is responsible for policy, guidance, and oversight of DOE's Real

24, 2009 Michael Ravnitzky 1905 August Drive Silver Spring, MD 20902 Re: FOIA-2009-000360 Dear Mr. Ravnitzky: This is in final response to the request for information that you sent to the Department of Energy (DOE) under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. Â§ 552. You asked for copies of each Weekly Departmental Report for the Department of Energy produced between January 1, 2009 and May 1, 2009. Your request was assigned to the Office of the Executive Secretariat for responsive

Michael Demkowicz: MIT Alumni Link: Opportunities, News and Resources for Former Employees Latest Issue:September 2015 all issues All Issues Â» submit Michael Demkowicz: MIT Former postdoc now an Associate Professor at MIT September 3, 2014 Michael Demkowicz Michael Demkowicz Contact Linda Anderman Email Michael Demkowicz Demkowicz now at MIT Michael Demkowicz worked at the Lab from 2005 to 2008 with the Materials Science and Technology division, first as a postdoc and then as a technical staff

Michael Torrez Michael Torrez-Tracing family lineages to colonial New Mexico Michael Torrez, by day a research technologist in the Laboratory's Materials Physics and Applications Division, spends much of his free time researching New Mexico's family histories. August 26, 2014 Michael Torrez Michael Torrez in front of a family tree he is researching. "Tracing one's family history is quite tricky. ...But nowadays we have much greater access to genealogical information than ever before, and

Michael Schlender is Chief Operations Officer and Associate Laboratory Director for Operational Systems at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, a VPP Star Site operated by Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy.

Michael Pesin has joined the Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability as Deputy Assistant Secretary for the Power Systems Engineering Research and Development Division. Michael has 30 years of experience in the electric utility industry, much of it directing development and execution of advanced technology programs. His most recent assignment was with Seattle City Light (SCL) where he developed the technology strategy, managed research and development projects and directed strategic programs to management demonstration projects.

Michael Hess About Us Michael Hess - Former Digital Communications Specialist, Office of Public Affairs Michael Hess Michael joined the Office of New Media at the Energy Department in August 2011 to write and promote stories about science technology, basic and applied science, technology transfer, commercialization, research and development, and the National Labs. In a previous life, Michael was an enlisted Air Force public affairs representative where he worked as the editor of RAF Lakenheath's

Michael Hess About Us Michael Hess - Former Digital Communications Specialist, Office of Public Affairs Michael Hess Michael joined the Office of New Media at the Energy Department in August 2011 to write and promote stories about science technology, basic and applied science, technology transfer, commercialization, research and development, and the National Labs. In a previous life, Michael was an enlisted Air Force public affairs representative where he worked as the editor of RAF Lakenheath's

Michael Budney About Us Michael Budney - Director of Business Operations Photo of Michael Budney. Michael Budney is the Director of Business Operations for the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE). He manages the daily operations of EERE's Project Management Coordination Office, Workforce Management Office and Information Technology Services Office to ensure their efforts are aligned, effective, and responsive to the organization's needs. Before joining EERE in May 2015,

S. Talmadge Michael S. Talmadge Senior Process Engineer, Biorefinery Analysis Michael.Talmadge@nrel.gov | 303-275-4632 Areas of Expertise Michael S. Talmadge has 15 years of experience in fuel production technologies with the first 10 years of his career spent in petroleum production and refining process development with ExxonMobil Research and Engineering Company and Valero Energy Corporation. Since joining the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), Talmadge has supported the development

Michael Capozzoli Website development effort leads to career opportunity for NETL intern Michael Capozzoli Michael Capozzoli configures the content management system that will power the new website at National Energy Technology Laboratory in Pittsburgh, Pa. Photo by Brian Albin/NETL Michael Capozzoli just needed an internship for graduation. What he got was even better. Capozzoli's assignment, offered through a National Energy Technology Laboratory professional internship program and

Michael Sternberg Senior Scientific Associate Ph.D., University of Paderborn, Germany Research focus is in the integration of various modeling programs, to enable researchers to combine the strengths of each approach to allow solving more complex problems Responsibility for the high-performance computing systems at the center Telephone 630.252.4631 Fax 630.252.4646 E-mail sternberg@anl.gov CV/Resume PDF icon sternberg

Michael Yarbrough Research Scientist John.Yarbrough@nrel.gov | 303-384-6831 Research Interests John Yarbrough received his Ph.D. in Applied Physics from the Colorado School of Mines (CSM) in 2007 where his research activities primarily involved investigating the electronic and optical properties of advanced polycrystalline semiconductor materials systems and device structures. He spent most of his time at CSM developing and using novel characterization techniques to obtain a fundamental

G. Zimmerman About Us Michael G. Zimmerman - Director, Office of Headquarters Security Operations Michael G. Zimmerman Mr. Michael Zimmerman is the Director of the Office of Headquarters Security Operations. The office supports DOE Headquarters through a comprehensive safeguards and security program providing protection for personnel, information and facilities at DOE Headquarters buildings. The protection programs within the Office of Headquarters Security Operations include the Protective

J. Ardaiz About Us Michael J. Ardaiz - Chief Medical Officer, Office of the Associate Under Secretary for Environment, Health, Safety and Security Michael J. Ardaiz Dr. Michael Ardaiz is the DOE Chief Medical Officer within the office of the Associate Under Secretary for Environment, Health, Safety, and Security. Currently, Dr. Ardaiz serves as the chief Occupational Medicine physician for the Department in support of over 50 occupational health facilities which in turn provide health care to

Michael Pesin, OE-10 About Us Michael Pesin, OE-10 - Deputy Assistant Secretary, Advanced Grid Research and Development Michael Pesin is Deputy Assistant Secretary for the Advanced Grid Research and Development Division in the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability. Mr. Pesin has 30 years of experience in the electric utility industry, much of it directing development and execution of advanced technology programs. His most recent assignment was with

Michael Seibert - Research Fellow Emeritus Photo of Michael Seibert Research Fellows Dr. Michael Seibert is a Research Fellow Emeritus of the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) and Research Professor in the Environmental Science and Engineering Department at the Colorado School of Mines, Golden. His current research interests include primary processes of and water-oxidation in oxygenic photosynthesis, structure and function of [Fe]-hydrogenases, molecular engineering of hydrogenases,

Memorial Gathering Pending for NERSC's Michael Welcome Memorial Gathering Pending for NERSC's Michael Welcome February 4, 2014 MWelcome.JPG Mike Welcome A celebration of life is pending for Michael Welcome, a member of NERSC's Mass Storage Group, who collapsed at work on Thursday, Jan. 30, and subsequently died. Welcome spent his entire career working for computing organizations at Lawrence Berkeley and Lawrence Livermore national laboratories. He was 56. During his 30-year career, Welcome made

Homogeneously dispersed solid reaction promoters having an average particle size from 0.01 .mu.m to 500 .mu.m are disclosed for preparing curable mixtures of at least one Michael donor and at least one Michael acceptor. The resulting curable mixtures are useful as coatings, adhesives, sealants and elastomers.

Michael Thackery, Distinguished Fellow at Argonne National Laboratory, speaks on the new technology Lithium-air batteries, which could potentially increase energy density by 5-10 times over lithium-ion batteries.

Michael Thackeray, Distinguished Fellow at Argonne National Laboratory, speaks on the new technology Lithium-air batteries, which could potentially increase energy density by 5-10 times over lithium-ion batteries.

Michael C Zarnstorff Deputy Director for Research Michael Zarnstorff is the deputy director for research at PPPL, where he oversees research that ranges from test- ing ideas for harnessing fusion to developing rockets for space flight. His job encompasses keeping projects aligned with DOE goals and envision- ing new research opportunities for PPPL. An award-winning physicist and a co-discoverer of the bootstrap current, he joined PPPL in 1984 and has been deputy director for research since 2009.

Papka Division Director Michael Papka Argonne National Laboratory 9700 South Cass Avenue Building 240 - Rm. 4134 Argonne, IL 60439 630-252-1556 papka@anl.gov http://papka.alcf.anl.gov Michael E. Papka is the Director of the ALCF. He is also Argonne's Deputy Associate Laboratory Director for Computing, Environment and Life Sciences. Both his laboratory leadership roles and his research interests relate to high-performance computing in support of scientific discovery. Dr. Papka holds a Senior

SEPTEMBER 2008 INVERSIONS H. Michael Mogil, Certified Consulting Meteorologist In the August 2008 issue of Climate Education Update, we looked at the concept of inversions, situations in which the temperature increases with increasing altitude. This is the opposite of what one would expect in the troposphere, the lowest shell of the atmosphere that is in contact with the Earth. Inversions are always present when fog is present. The most commonly observed inversion is the one found near the

Chief Operating Officer, Michael Dallas Dr. Rolf Ent Associate Director for Experimental Nuclear Physics Rolf Ent came to Jefferson Lab in 1993 as a Hall C scientist and adjunct professor at Hampton University. Rolf served as experimental group leader of the Nuclear and High-Energy Physics (NuHEP) Center at Hampton University from 1996-2001, and served as Hall C Leader from 2002-2006. He then served as the 12 GeV Upgrade Science lead at Jefferson Lab until 2009, and became associate director for

U.S.-Israel Energy Meetings U.S.-Israel Energy Meetings The United States and Israel participate in annual U.S.-Israel Energy Meetings, which include participants from multiple agencies from each country. The U.S. Department of Energy leads the annual meetings for the United States, and the Israeli Ministry of National Infrastructures, Energy, and Water Resources leads the meetings for Israel. The U.S.-Israel Energy Meeting is a central part of the United States' engagement with Israel on energy

Energy Mechanical Engineer: Michael Brambley 10 Questions for a Mechanical Engineer: Michael Brambley July 17, 2013 - 1:51pm Addthis Pictured here is Michael Brambley in front of equipment that supplies chilled water to PNNL Building Diagnostics Laboratory's air handler. The cooled air from an air handler is distributed to terminal boxes, which are the last point for controlling air temperature and flow before distributing it throughout a building zone. In a new control strategy for

Energy on United States - Israel Energy Dialogue Joint Statement on United States - Israel Energy Dialogue October 20, 2015 - 11:52am Addthis Joint Statement on United States - Israel Energy Dialogue News Media Contact (202) 586-4940 On Monday, October 19, 2015, U.S. Secretary of Energy Ernest J. Moniz and Israeli Minister of National Infrastructures, Energy, and Water Resources Yuval Steinitz launched the 2015 U.S.-Israel Energy Dialogue. The dialogue, held regularly since 2011, includes

Nuclear Security Administration | (NNSA) Michael Hickman receives NNSA Gold Medal, announces retirement Thursday, May 28, 2015 - 9:21am NNSA's Director of the Office of Enterprise Project Management Michael Hickman has announced that he will be retiring effective May 29, 2015 after 34 years distinguished federal service. As a member of the Senior Executive Service, he has spent approximately 25 of those years in senior leadership positions across DOE and NNSA. In his current capacity,

Argonne-Northwestern National Laboratory Director Michael R. Wasielewski elected to AAAS Home > News & Events > ANSER Director Michael R. Wasielewski elected to AAAS Originally published on Northwestern News Six Northwestern Faculty Elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences April 20, 2016 | by Megan Fellman EVANSTON, Ill. --- Six members of the Northwestern University faculty have been elected members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, one of the nation's

Center Science in St. Louis | Dr. Michael Fix March 15, 2016 Science in St. Louis | Dr. Michael Fix Monster in the Hollow - The Story of Missouri's Ozark Dinosaurs Professor Fix has been a member of UMSL's Physics faculty since 1976 and is responsible for teaching all of the Geology classes and labs that are offered through the department. He is a graduate of Washington University's department of Earth and Planetary Sciences with a focus in paleontology and stratigraphy. He was chosen by the

AUGUST 2008 IN A FOG H. Michael Mogil, Certified Consulting Meteorologist In April 2008, scientists from the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program conducted an experiment using an airplane that flew over Barrow, Alaska, where the North Slope Alaska ARM Climate Research Facility is located. Throughout the experiment, they were based out of Fairbanks, about 500 miles inland from Barrow. Instruments on the aircraft and at Barrow allowed the scientists to obtain various measurements from

Puzzling Boundaries of Topological Quantum Matter Michael Levin University of Chicago October 14, 2015 4:00 p.m. Insulators, by definition, cannot conduct electric current in their interior. However, some insulators - most famously, the recently discovered "topological insulators" - possess the unusual property that they conduct at their surfaces or edges. This conduction occurs through modes that travel along the boundary of the insulator, like waves moving on the surface of the

9 - In the Matter of Michael Ravnitzky FIA-16-0039 - In the Matter of Michael Ravnitzky On July 28, 2016, OHA granted in part a FOIA Appeal filed by Michael Ravinitzky from a determination issued by the Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI) of the Department of Energy. In the Appeal, the Appellant challenged OSTI's decision to withhold responsive records under Exemptions 3 and 4 of the FOIA. Reviewing only the unclassified portion of the responsive records, OHA found that OSTI's

Energy Materials Center at Cornell Michael Lowe Senior Chemist - Dow Chemical Company As part of the AbruĂ±a Group, Michael received his PhD in 2012. He has since joined Dow Chemical at their Michigan area facility where he is a Analytical Chemist for Core R&D

Reserves, characteristics, energetics, chemistry, and technology of Israeli oil shales are described. Oil shale is the only source of energy and the only organic natural resource in Israel. Its reserves of about 12 billion tons will be enough to meet Israel`s requirements for about 80 years. The heating value of the oil shale is 1,150 kcal/kg, oil yield is 6%, and sulfur content of the oil is 5--7%. A method of oil shale processing, providing exhaustive utilization of its energy and chemical potential, developed in the Technion, is described. The principal feature of the method is a two-stage pyrolysis of the oil shale. As a result, gas and aromatic liquids are obtained. The gas may be used for energy production in a high-efficiency power unit, or as a source for chemical synthesis. The liquid products can be an excellent source for production of chemicals.

Israel: A Source of Innovation for GE Click to email this to a friend (Opens in new window) Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Click to share (Opens in new window) Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Israel: A Source of Innovation for GE Oded Meirav 2014.05.22 Unlike other research organizations within GE Global Research, my team is not tasked with developing technology for GE's businesses. Instead...we hunt! Our job is to identify

Department of Energy U.S.-Israel Integrated Energy and Desalination Design Challenge Lab Call U.S.-Israel Integrated Energy and Desalination Design Challenge Lab Call On May 23, 2016, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced the U.S.-Israel Integrated Energy and Desalination Design Challenge. Through this Challenge, DOE and Israel's Ministry of National Infrastructure, Energy and Water Resources (MIEW) will encourage leading engineers in the U.S. and Israel to design a novel integrated

-Israel Integrated Energy and Desalination Design Challenge Lab Call The U.S.-Israel Integrated Energy and Desalination Design Challenge will give U.S. and Israeli experts the opportunity to learn from each other on desalination and associated system design issues, while also stimulating innovative thinking on next-generation systems. Through this Challenge, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and Israel's Ministry of National Infrastructure, Energy and Water Resources (MIEW) will encourage

Letter to Science (Original version submitted to Science on Feb. 14 th , 2008; revised on March 14 th , 2008) Michael Wang Center for Transportation Research Argonne National Laboratory Zia Haq Office of Biomass Program Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy U.S. Department of Energy The article by Searchinger et al. in Sciencexpress ("Use of U.S. Croplands for Biofuels Increases Greenhouse Gases through Emissions from Land Use Change," February 7, 2008) provides a timely

head of stockpile manufacturing and support January 22, 2008 Organization responsible for production of nuclear weapon components and other national security- related products and services LOS ALAMOS, New Mexico, January 22, 2008-Laboratory Director Michael Anastasio has named Carl Beard as the new associate director for stockpile manufacturing and support. Beard has held this position in an acting capacity since June 2007"The stockpile manufacturing directorate produces for the nation

Knyszek, Matthew Lotocki, Jared Miller, Andrew Zwicker. | Princeton Plasma Physics Lab Display of Tournament Bracket" Inventors Eliot Feibush, Michael Knyszek, Matthew Lotocki, Jared Miller, Andrew Zwicker. The system creates a diagram of the rounds of a tournament. It is formatted to fit legibly on a one high-definition screen without having to scroll the data. It shows the progression of competitors in a single or double elimination tournament. The score of each match is transmitted

-- Hr. Michael Esposito Audio-Tex Industries, Incorporated 4555 West Addison Street Chicago, Illinois 60641 Dear Mr. Esposito: Enclosed is a copy of the final survey report for your facility in Chicago,. Illinois , which is the site of the former ERA Tool & Engineering Company. The survey report documents the fact that the radiological condition of your facility is in compliance with applicable Department of Energy Guidelines and that no remedial action or further investigaticns are

A new class of surface modified particles and a multi-step Michael-type addition surface modification process for the preparation of the same is provided. The multi-step Michael-type addition surface modification process involves two or more reactions to compatibilize particles with various host systems and/or to provide the particles with particular chemical reactivities. The initial step comprises the attachment of a small organic compound to the surface of the inorganic particle. The subsequent steps attach additional compounds to the previously attached organic compounds through reactive organic linking groups. Specifically, these reactive groups are activated carboncarbon pi bonds and carbon and non-carbon nucleophiles that react via Michael or Michael-type additions.

A new class of surface modified particles and a multi-step Michael-type addition surface modification process for the preparation of the same is provided. The multi-step Michael-type addition surface modification process involves two or more reactions to compatibilize particles with various host systems and/or to provide the particles with particular chemical reactivities. The initial step comprises the attachment of a small organic compound to the surface of the inorganic particle. The subsequent steps attach additional compounds to the previously attached organic compounds through reactive organic linking groups. Specifically, these reactive groups are activated carbonâcarbon pi bonds and carbon and non-carbon nucleophiles that react via Michael or Michael-type additions.

This report presents results of a Hydrogeochemical and Stream Sediment Reconnaissance (HSSR) of the St. Michael NTMS Quadrangle, Alaska. In addition to this abbreviated data release, more complete data are available to the public in machine-readable form. These machine-readable data, as well as quarterly or semiannual program progress reports containing further information on the HSSR program in general, or on the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) portion of the program in particular, are available from DOE's Technical Library at its Grand Junction Area Office. Presented in this data release are location data, field analyses, and laboratory analyses of several different sample media. For the sake of brevity, many field site observations have not been included in this volume; these data are, however, available on the magnetic tape. Appendices A and B describe the sample media and summarize the analytical results for each medium. The data have been subdivided by one of the Los Alamos National Laboratory sorting programs of Zinkl and others (1981a) into groups of steam-sediment and lake-sediment samples. For each group which contains a sufficient number of observations, statistical tables, tables of raw data, and 1:1,000,000 scale maps of pertinent elements have been included in this report. Also included are maps showing results of multivariate statistical analyses. Information on the field and analytical procedures used by the Los Alamos National Laboratory during sample collection and analysis may be found in any HSSR data release prepared by the Laboratory and will not be included in this report.

Under the 13th Bilateral Meeting to Combat Nuclear Terrorism conducted on January 8â9, 2013, the committee approved the development of a cost-effective proposal to conduct a Comparison Study of the Aerial Measuring System (AMS) of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) and Israel Atomic Energy Commission (IAEC). The study was to be held at the Remote Sensing Laboratory (RSL), Nellis Air Force Base, Las Vegas, Nevada, with measurements at the Nevada National Security Site (NNSS). The goal of the AMS and the IAEC joint survey was to compare the responses of the two agenciesâ aerial radiation detection systems to varied radioactive surface contamination levels and isotopic composition experienced at the NNSS, and the differing data processing techniques utilized by the respective teams. Considering that for the comparison both teams were using custom designed and built systems, the main focus of the short campaign was to investigate the impact of the detector size and data analysis techniques used by both teams. The AMS system, SPectral Advanced Radiological Computer System, Model A (SPARCS-A), designed and built by RSL, incorporates four different size sodium iodide (NaI) crystals: 1" Ă 1", 2" Ă 4" Ă 4", 2" Ă 4" Ă16", and an âup-lookingâ 2" Ă 4" Ă 4". The Israel AMS System, Air RAM 2000, was designed by the IAEC Nuclear Research Center â Negev (NRCN) and built commercially by ROTEM Industries (Israel) and incorporates two 2" diameter Ă 2" long NaI crystals. The operational comparison was conducted at RSL-Nellis in Las Vegas, Nevada, during week of June 24â27, 2013. The Israeli system, Air RAM 2000, was shipped to RSL-Nellis and mounted together with the DOE SPARCS on a DOE Bell-412 helicopter for a series of aerial comparison measurements at local test ranges, including the Desert Rock Airport and Area 3 at the NNSS. A 4-person Israeli team from the IAEC NRCN supported the activity together with 11

Here, we investigated the mid-Pleistocene to recent aggradation-incision pattern of two drainage systems (Nahal Peres and Nahal Tahmas) in the hyperarid north eastern Negev desert, southern Israel. Although these drainage systems drain into the tectonically active Dead Sea basin, lake level fluctuations cannot account for the aggradation-incision pattern as bedrock knickpoints disconnect the investigated parts of these drainage systems from base level influence. We applied geomorphic mapping, soil stratigraphy, optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) and cosmogenic (in situ 10Be) exposure dating to reconstruct cycles of aggradation and incision of alluvial terraces and to study their temporal association with regional periods ofmoreÂ Â» humidity and aridity and global glacial-interglacial cycles. The spatial and temporal relationships between the alluvial units suggest changes in the drainage system behavior since the middle Pleistocene, and show a pattern in which prolonged periods of sediment aggradation alternated with short periods of rapid and intense degradation through erosion and incision into sediment and bedrock. We obtain ages for several Pleistocene-Holocene periods of incision: ~ 1.1 Ma, ~ 300 ka, ~ 120 ka, ~ 20 ka, ~ 12 ka and ~ 2 ka. Although broadly synchronous, the Nahal Peres and Nahal Tahmas systems exhibit temporal differences in aggradation and incision.Â«Â less

North collaborates with colleagues in the Global Security Sciences division. From right to left: Mike North, Pam Sydelko, Ignacio Martinez-Moyano, and Jessica Trail. Click image to enlarge. North collaborates with colleagues in the Global Security Sciences division. From right to left: Mike North, Pam Sydelko, Ignacio Martinez-Moyano, and Jessica Trail. Click image to enlarge. North maintains a healthy work-life balance by working out regularly at the Argonne Fitness Center. The gym is free,

Please accept the attached comments from Pascoag Utility District regarding the Quadrennial Energy Review process. Out comments focus on the difficulty with our current RTO market structure and its lack of providing appropriate cost-effective solutions to our energy infrastructure needs in New England.

Code of Federal Regulations Part 712, Human Reliability Program | Department of Energy Clarification of Requirements for Certification in Title 10 Code of Federal Regulations Part 712, Human Reliability Program Memorandum, Clarification of Requirements for Certification in Title 10 Code of Federal Regulations Part 712, Human Reliability Program August 20, 2013 Clarification of Requirements for Certification in Title 10 Code of Federal Regulations Part 712, Human Reliability Program

Carmelo Melendez About Us Carmelo Melendez - Director, Office of Asset Management Mr. Melendez is the Agency's Property Executive, Senior Real Property Officer (SRPO), Head of Contracting Activity (HCA) for Real Estate and Office Director for Asset Management within the Office of Management. His portfolio covers Real Estate, Facility & Infrastructure, and Personal/Industrial Property Management and Policy. In this position, he is responsible for policy, guidance, and oversight of DOE's Real

Achieving International Agreement and Climate Protection by Coordinated Mitigation of Short- and Long-Lived Greenhouse Gases. Presented at the China-US Workshop on the "Climate-Energy Nexus" at Oak Ridge National Laboratory on November 11, 2009.

Time-Based Rates from the Consumer Behavior Studies (June 2015) | Department of Energy Interim Report on Customer Acceptance, Retention, and Response to Time-Based Rates from the Consumer Behavior Studies (June 2015) Interim Report on Customer Acceptance, Retention, and Response to Time-Based Rates from the Consumer Behavior Studies (June 2015) Since 2009, the U.S. Department of Energy, using funds from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, and the electric power industry have jointly

Dr. Wang's work spans a wide range -- from transportation fuels to advanced vehicles technologies. His team also developed GREET (Greenhouse gases, Regulated Emissions and Energy use in Transportation), a computer model for analyzing energy and the environmental effects of these technologies and fuels.

The US DOE recently initiated an effort to develop accident tolerant fuel designs for potential use in commercial power reactors. Evaluation of various fuel design concepts will require a broad array of testing that will include performance attributes at both steady state and transient irradiation conditions. The first stage of the transient testing program is intended to establish the relative performance limits of each proposed concept and to support development of first-draft fuel performance models. It is anticipated that this data can subsequently be used as the basis for larger scale qualification testing. This initial stage of the testing program is outlined in this paper.

To fully evaluate energy and emission impacts of advanced vehicle technologies and new transportation fuels, the fuel cycle from wells to wheels and the vehicle cycle through material recovery and vehicle disposal need to be considered. Sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE), Argonne has developed a full life-cycle model called GREET (Greenhouse gases, Regulated Emissions, and Energy use in Transportation). It allows researchers and analysts to evaluate various vehicle and fuel combinations on a full fuel-cycle/vehicle-cycle basis. The first version of GREET was released in 1996. Since then, Argonne has continued to update and expand the model. The most recent GREET versions are the GREET 1 2012 version for fuel-cycle analysis and GREET 2.7 version for vehicle-cycle analysis.

Summit | National Nuclear Security Administration | (NNSA) Joint Statement by the United States and Italy on the 2014 Nuclear Security Summit March 24, 2014 See a fact sheet here. The White House Office of the Press Secretary Italy and the United States of America are pleased to announce that they have jointly completed the removal of approximately 20 kilograms of excess highly enriched uranium (HEU) and separated plutonium from Italy. At the 2012 Nuclear Security Summit, Italy and the

The DOE Fire Safety Committee recognizes Mr. Catesâ direct and indirect actions towards the protection of life and property both within and beyond the realm of DOE by presenting him the 2014 Walter W. Maybee Award.

During the summer of 1984 a health survey was carried out among the population of six rural settlements, three in a polluted and three in a low polluted area. Residents of these settlements between 6 and 65 years of age filled out an ATS-NHLI health questionnaire and performed the following pulmonary function tests (PFT): FVC, FEV/sub 1/, FEV/sub 1//FVC, PEF, FEF/sub 50/, and FEF/sub 75/. A trend of higher prevalence of reported respiratory symptoms and diseases characterizes children growing up in a polluted rural as compared with a low polluted rural area. The relative risks (calculated from logistic models) for children from the polluted area to have sputum with cold is 2.13, cough accompanied by sputum 3.89, and for their siblings to have respiratory diseases 3.02, as compared with 1.00 in the low polluted area. A trend of lower PFT characterizes children from the polluted area, with significantly reduced PEF. The trends for adults in the two areas were similar to those for the children. The relative risks for adults from the polluted area to have sputum is 1.7 and cough accompanied by sputum 2.6, as compared with 1.0 in the low polluted area. PEF is significantly lower among adults from the polluted area, while FEF/sub 50/ and FEF/sub 75/ are lower (not significantly) among adults from the low polluted area.

U.S. Department of Energy and Israelâs Ministry of National Infrastructure, Energy and Water Resources announce $5.1 million for six newly selected clean energy projects as part of the Binational Industrial Research and Development Energy program.

The Akko 1 shipwreck was a small Egyptian armed vessel or auxiliary naval brig built in the eastern Mediterranean at the beginning of the 19th century. During the underwater excavations, about 230 brass hook-and-eye closures were found, mainly in the bow area. In addition, 158 brass cases were found, mainly between midships and the aft extremity of the shipwreck. Metallurgical non-destructive and destructive characterizations of selected items were performed, including radiographic testing, XRF, lead isotope analysis, optical microscopy, SEMâEDS and microhardness tests. The hook-and-eye closures and the cases were both found to be made of binary copperâzinc alloy (about 30 wt.% zinc). While the brass cases were made from rolled sheets, hand-made using simple tools, and joined by tinâlead soldering material, the brass hook-and-eye closures were hand-made from drawn brass wire, and manufactured from commercial drawn brass bars by a cold-working process. The lead isotope analyses suggest different provenances of the raw materials used for making the brass objects, thus the different origins of the ores may hint that the brass wire and sheet were imported to the workshops in which the objects were manufactured. - Highlights: âą Brass cases and hook-and-eye closures were retrieved from the Akko 1 shipwreck. âą Both types of objects were made of binary copperâzinc alloy (about 30 wt.% zinc). âą The cases were hand-made from rolled sheets and joined by tinâlead soldering. âą Hook-and-eye closures were made from drawn brass wire manufactured by cold-working. âą Lead isotope analyses suggest that the origins of the raw material were diverse.

Three-year Rolling Timeline Three-year Rolling Timeline SIGNED=Melendez_FY13 Three Year Rolling Timeline_Update_Final.pdf (543.33 KB) More Documents & Publications Three Year Rolling Timeline FY2012 Three Year Rolling Timeline The Department&#8217;s real property assets are vital to the accomplishment of its mission

Second and fifth grade schoolchildren living in two communities with different levels of air pollution were studied. The parents of these children filled out ATS-NHLI health questionnaires. The prevalence of reported respiratory symptoms and pulmonary diseases was found to be significantly higher among children growing up in the polluted community (Ashdod) as compared with the low-pollution area (Hadera). Logistic models fitted for the respiratory conditions which differed significantly between both areas of residence also included background variables that could be responsible for these differences. Relative risk values, which were calculated from the logistic models, were in the range of 1.47 for cough without cold to 2.66 for asthma for children from Ashdod, as compared with 1.00 for children from Hadera.

Michael L. Rodrigue About Us Michael L. Rodrigue - Chief Operating Officer Michael L. Rodrigue Michael L. Rodrigue coordinates and executes the administrative operations that support the mission of the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Indian Energy, including acquisitions, human capital, facilities, and financial management

Alternative Fuels Lessons Learned Workshop Prepared for: 2010-2025 H2 Scenario Analysis Meeting Margo Melendez - NREL Disclaimer and Government License This work has been authored by Midwest Research Institute (MRI) under Contract No. DE-AC36-99GO10337 with the U.S. Department of Energy (the "DOE"). The United States Government (the "Government") retains and the publisher, by accepting the work for publication, acknowledges that the Government retains a non-exclusive,

Yoho receives NNSA Fellowship Yoho receives NNSA Fellowship Michael Yoho was one of four students selected nationwide for the NNIS fellowship. July 15, 2014 Michael Yoho Michael Yoho The NNIS Fellowship program is designed to meet NNSA's needs for appropriately trained personnel in research and development in areas pertinent to nuclear nonproliferation and international safeguards. Michael Yoho, a doctoral candidate at the University of Texas at Austin and graduate research assistant in the

J. Michael McQuade About Us J. Michael McQuade - Senior Vice President, Science and Technology - United Technologies Corporation J. Michael McQuade J. Michael McQuade is Senior Vice President for Science & Technology at United Technologies Corporation. His responsibilities include providing strategic oversight and guidance for research, engineering and development activities throughout the business units of the corporation and at the United Technologies Research Center. Dr. McQuade held

Berube About Us Michael Berube - Vehicle Technologies Office Director Photo of Michael Berube. Michael Berube leads the Vehicle Technologies Office for the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE). In this post, he leads an array of activities that help reduce America's dependence on foreign oil and secure a clean energy future. The Vehicle Technologies Office supports about $300 million in annual research funding for hybrid drivetrains, advanced batteries, lightweight materials,

Princeton Plasma Physics Lab Campanell wins Lawrence Fellowship to pursue plasma physics research By John Greenwald May 7, 2014 Tweet Widget Google Plus One Share on Facebook Michael Campanell (Photo by Elle Starkman) Michael Campanell Princeton University graduate student Michael Campanell has won a highly competitive Lawrence Fellowship, resulting in a postdoctoral position at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Campanell was one of just two candidates selected from a field of 163

Infrastructure Operations Division: Michael Hazen Michael Hazen Vice President, Infrastructure Operations Division Mike Hazen Michael Hazen is vice president of the Infrastructure Operations Division and serves as chief security officer at Sandia National Laboratories, a subsidiary of Lockheed Martin Corporation. In September 2007 he assumed his current position with line responsibilities that include Radiation Protection, Waste Management, Environment, Safety, and Health; Security and

Fellowship Experiences Fellowship Experiences Michael Martin Michael Martin 2016 Truman Fellow After receiving a bachelor's degree in physics from Harvey Mudd College in 2006, Michael (Mike) Martin pursued a Ph.D. in physics at the University of Colorado Boulder (CU-Boulder). He completed his doctoral program in May 2013 and then joined the California Institute of Technology as a postdoctoral fellow at the Institute for Quantum Information and Matter, where he worked to combine nanophotonic

Energy Mechanical Engineer: Michael Brambley 10 Questions for a Mechanical Engineer: Michael Brambley July 17, 2013 - 1:51pm Addthis Pictured here is Michael Brambley in front of equipment that supplies chilled water to PNNL Building Diagnostics Laboratory's air handler. The cooled air from an air handler is distributed to terminal boxes, which are the last point for controlling air temperature and flow before distributing it throughout a building zone. In a new control strategy for

LOWER HYBRID EXPERIMENTS USING AN INTERDIGITAL LINE ANTENNA ON THE REVERSED FIELD PINCH by Michael C. Kaufman A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Physics) at the UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON 2009 c 2009 Michael C. Kaufman All Rights Reserved i Lower Hybrid Experiments Using an Interdigital Line Antenna on the Reversed Field Pinch Michael C. Kaufman Under the supervision of Professor Stewart C. Prager At the University of